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Catholic News 2

(Vatican Radio) Catholic organisations working on HIV and AIDS began a meeting in Durban on Friday, ahead of the 21st International AIDS Conference, due to open in the same South African city next Monday.The meeting, organised by Caritas Internationalis and the Catholic HIV & AIDS Network, in conjunction with local Southern African partners, brings together many Catholic groups playing a major part in providing diagnosis, care and prevention programmes for people living with the HIV virus.The papal nuncio to South Africa, Archbishop Peter Wells, and the Archbishop of Durban, Cardinal Wilfred Napier were among those welcoming participants to the opening session of the three day pre-conference.Another key speaker at the meeting is Msgr. Robert Vitillo, Caritas Internationalis special advisor on HIV and health. He talked to Philippa Hitchen about the goals of the encounter and the progress that faith based organisations have achieved since the first global AIDS conference was hel...

(Vatican Radio) Catholic organisations working on HIV and AIDS began a meeting in Durban on Friday, ahead of the 21st International AIDS Conference, due to open in the same South African city next Monday.

The meeting, organised by Caritas Internationalis and the Catholic HIV & AIDS Network, in conjunction with local Southern African partners, brings together many Catholic groups playing a major part in providing diagnosis, care and prevention programmes for people living with the HIV virus.

The papal nuncio to South Africa, Archbishop Peter Wells, and the Archbishop of Durban, Cardinal Wilfred Napier were among those welcoming participants to the opening session of the three day pre-conference.

Another key speaker at the meeting is Msgr. Robert Vitillo, Caritas Internationalis special advisor on HIV and health. He talked to Philippa Hitchen about the goals of the encounter and the progress that faith based organisations have achieved since the first global AIDS conference was held in Durban in the year 2000….

Listen: 

Mgr Vitillo notes that the Church has been organizing pre-conferences like this one for over 20 years to share good practices, to discuss the ethical and theological issues specific to the Catholic Church in AIDS ministry, and to pray for the work of the global conferences.

He recalls that access to proper medical treatment, especially for developing countries, began at the Durban 2000 conference, where activists demanded an end to discrimination and “second class citizenship” for HIV-infected people in poorer countries. From that conference, he says, the Global Fund to fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria was born, followed by the U.S government’s PEPFAR programme, the two largest funders of treatment programmes in low income countries.

Access to treatment remains a challenge

While huge progress has been made since that first Durban conference, Mgr Vitillo says too many people in rural areas or minority communities still don’t have access to life saving HIV treatment. Furthermore, almost 50% of all people living with HIV still don’t know their status and are therefore likely to spread the disease to their sexual partners, he says. Another vulnerable group, he adds, are babies infected through breast- feeding after their mothers stop taking the ARV drugs.

Vital role of faith based organisations

Faith groups, he says, continue to play a vital role, often providing up to 50% of treatment in some countries. In particular, he notes, they treat people in rural areas where government programmes don’t reach and they’ve pioneered creative ways of bringing treatment to the communities in need, rather than expecting people to walk for a day to the nearest centre. Importantly, he adds, faith groups offer integral programmes, not just treating physical symptoms, but also responding to social situations, pioneering self-help groups and assisting widows and orphans.ù

Children: a priority in Durban

In particular, Mgr Vitillo points to the role of the Catholic Church in pioneering better pediatric treatment for children, recalling how Caritas Internationalis and other groups invited UN and government experts to the Vatican in April to draw up an action plan to address the specific needs of children. He notes that the main Durban conference is due to introduce a super-fast track for children – the first time they have received so much attention at an international AIDS conference.

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The head of Sri Lanka’s Catholic bishops has appealed to the nation’s leaders to help those who have lost their homes and livelihood because of an explosion and fire that erupted at an army base in Salawa, near the capital city a month ago.  "Residents in the area forced to flee only with the clothes on their backs as a result of the tragedy are still in a state of shock and suffering," Cardinal Malcolm Ranjith, Archbishop of Colombo said in a press statement. A soldier was killed and thousands of people were evacuated due to the fire and explosions that raged June 5-6.  While completely destroying the army camp and its munitions stockpiles, the tragedy, also destroyed hundreds of nearby homes and businesses.  The cardinal says that people are now living in makeshift tents."They have lost everything they toiled for over a lifetime, their homes, their commercial ventures and everything that belonged to them which have been reduced to r...

The head of Sri Lanka’s Catholic bishops has appealed to the nation’s leaders to help those who have lost their homes and livelihood because of an explosion and fire that erupted at an army base in Salawa, near the capital city a month ago.  "Residents in the area forced to flee only with the clothes on their backs as a result of the tragedy are still in a state of shock and suffering," Cardinal Malcolm Ranjith, Archbishop of Colombo said in a press statement. 

A soldier was killed and thousands of people were evacuated due to the fire and explosions that raged June 5-6.  While completely destroying the army camp and its munitions stockpiles, the tragedy, also destroyed hundreds of nearby homes and businesses.  The cardinal says that people are now living in makeshift tents.

"They have lost everything they toiled for over a lifetime, their homes, their commercial ventures and everything that belonged to them which have been reduced to rubble and ash," Cardinal Ranjith said, asking the President and Prime Minister to speed up assistance for those affected by the disaster.  "Even though promises have been made by the relevant authorities that their houses and ventures would be re-built very soon,” the prelate lamented that due to red tape and official procedure, these promises are still be to realized.  (Source: AsiaNews)

 

 

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A court in Bangladesh's northern Dinajpur district accepted on Friday a police charge sheet against seven suspected Islamic militants for shooting an Italian Catholic priest last year.  All those charged are from the banned local militant outfit Jamaatul Mujahedin Bangladesh, said investigating officer Bazlur Rashid of Dinajpur police. "The court has accepted a charge sheet against seven militants and ordered the release of three whose involvement in the case was not proved. We have already arrested four of the suspected militants and we continue our efforts to nab the three others," Rashid told Ucanews.Assailants on Nov. 18 shot 64-year-old Father Piero Parolari of the Pontifical Institute for Foreign Missions (PIME) while he was riding a bicycle on his way to the church-run St. Vincent Hospital in Dinajpur.  Father Parolari, a medical doctor, worked in the town for about 30 years, mostly in the hospital. He also helped at the Sacred Heart of Jesus Ch...

A court in Bangladesh's northern Dinajpur district accepted on Friday a police charge sheet against seven suspected Islamic militants for shooting an Italian Catholic priest last year.  All those charged are from the banned local militant outfit Jamaatul Mujahedin Bangladesh, said investigating officer Bazlur Rashid of Dinajpur police. 

"The court has accepted a charge sheet against seven militants and ordered the release of three whose involvement in the case was not proved. We have already arrested four of the suspected militants and we continue our efforts to nab the three others," Rashid told Ucanews.

Assailants on Nov. 18 shot 64-year-old Father Piero Parolari of the Pontifical Institute for Foreign Missions (PIME) while he was riding a bicycle on his way to the church-run St. Vincent Hospital in Dinajpur.  Father Parolari, a medical doctor, worked in the town for about 30 years, mostly in the hospital. He also helped at the Sacred Heart of Jesus Church in the town.  After he was shot, Fr. Parolari was treated in a local hospital and then was shifted to the Bangladeshi capital Dhaka for better treatment.  He is currently in Italy.

"Legal justice is a lengthy process in Bangladesh, yet we hope to see justice as the court has accepted the charge sheet,” Bishop Sebastian Tudu of Dinajpur told Ucanews.  “We expect justice to be delivered in the quickest possible time," he said.  The bishop said they would like to see the real culprits get punished and don't want the case to be a tool for political gains. 

Muslim-majority Bangladesh has seen a surge in Islamic militancy since 2013. Islamic militants have killed dozens of people, including secular bloggers, writers, academics, foreigners and those from religious minorities. In the worst attack, a group of Islamic militants, armed with assault rifles, bombs and swords, massacred 20 hostages in a Dhaka cafe on July 1.  (Source: UCAN)

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(VATICAN RADIO) Russian President Vladimir Putin signed into law on July 7th a package of so-called anti-terrorism measures. The U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom strongly condemns these measures and says that, under the guise of confronting terrorism, they would grant authorities sweeping powers to curtail civil liberties, including setting broad restrictions on religious practices that would make it very difficult for religious groups to operate.Chair of the U.S. Commission, Jesuit Father Thomas Reese, said:  “Neither these measures nor the currently existing anti-extremism law meet international human rights and religious freedom standards.” To find out more about this new legislation, I spoke with Andrew Boyd, spokesman for Release International, which serves persecuted Christians around the world.Listen:  “It is essentially an anti-terrorist catch-all, which some people are calling a ‘Big Brother&rsqu...

(VATICAN RADIO) Russian President Vladimir Putin signed into law on July 7th a package of so-called anti-terrorism measures. The U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom strongly condemns these measures and says that, under the guise of confronting terrorism, they would grant authorities sweeping powers to curtail civil liberties, including setting broad restrictions on religious practices that would make it very difficult for religious groups to operate.

Chair of the U.S. Commission, Jesuit Father Thomas Reese, said:  “Neither these measures nor the currently existing anti-extremism law meet international human rights and religious freedom standards.” 

To find out more about this new legislation, I spoke with Andrew Boyd, spokesman for Release International, which serves persecuted Christians around the world.

Listen: 

“It is essentially an anti-terrorist catch-all, which some people are calling a ‘Big Brother’ law because it gives the authorities the right to survey what you do online, so they could monitor your emails and do things like that.

But the impact it’s going to have on Christians is really quite extraordinary and very draconian…it will curtail preaching, teaching, and sharing about the Christian faith…It will outlaw the sharing of your faith or the informing of others about your beliefs within the privacy of your own home,” Boyd said.

When asked how such an extreme law could emerge in the 21st century, Boyd replied:  “This law is an attempt to prevent radicalization within homes and the spread of extremism,” but, he explained, the law essentially equates religion to extremism and religious people to terrorists.

Boyd seemed hopeful that there is action that can be undertaken to overturn this new law, but warned against the “bigger concern” which is the mood in Russia from which a law like this was able to arise. “As always,” he said, “the Christians are caught in the middle of this.”

In conclusion, Boyd said:  “[This law] is not going to stop the church, and it’s not going to stop the faith…it’s just going to make it more difficult for those who are living up to their obligation to fulfil Jesus’ great commission, and these are the ones we need to pray for and to stand with.”

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(Vatican Radio)  Vanessa Greco, an American resident in the French city of Nice, had a narrow escape when she and her family decided not to attend the city’s fireworks display marking France’s National Holiday because one of her young children fell sick at the last moment. Greco, a former journalist at Vatican Radio now living in Nice with her two children aged 4 and 5, described the somber mood and shock following Thursday’s attack which saw a driver plough his truck at high speed through packed crowds that had gathered along the city’s famous Promenade des Anglais boulevard. She spoke to Susy Hodges about how she first learnt the news and her personal reaction to this tragedy.Listen to the interview with Vanessa Greco, a resident of Nice:  Greco described how a friend who had gone to the fireworks display phoned her up to check where she was and how she could hear the sound of people screaming in the background during their conversation. Sh...

(Vatican Radio)  Vanessa Greco, an American resident in the French city of Nice, had a narrow escape when she and her family decided not to attend the city’s fireworks display marking France’s National Holiday because one of her young children fell sick at the last moment. Greco, a former journalist at Vatican Radio now living in Nice with her two children aged 4 and 5, described the somber mood and shock following Thursday’s attack which saw a driver plough his truck at high speed through packed crowds that had gathered along the city’s famous Promenade des Anglais boulevard. She spoke to Susy Hodges about how she first learnt the news and her personal reaction to this tragedy.

Listen to the interview with Vanessa Greco, a resident of Nice: 

Greco described how a friend who had gone to the fireworks display phoned her up to check where she was and how she could hear the sound of people screaming in the background during their conversation. 

She said the news left her feeling “terrified” and wondering, like other parents, how they can protect themselves and their young children. One of the most shocking things for her was that the truck driver responsible for the attack had chosen a soft target: families and children who had flocked to the Promenade des Anglais to watch a fireworks display on a national holiday.

Greco walked around many areas of central Nice on Friday and described the very “somber and sad” mood now reigning in the city.  She said many restaurants in the area near the attack were closed and the normally packed beach by the Promenade des Anglais was empty despite the hot and sunny weather.

Looking visibly traumatized, the nanny who looks after Greco’s children had gone to the fireworks display with her husband and afterwards told her employer how she had seen a young boy killed by the truck and other people mown down by the truck driver. “Describing what she saw and heard….. it was clear she had “lived a nightmare,” said Greco.

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Bogotá, Colombia, Jul 15, 2016 / 06:24 am (CNA/EWTN News).- A Colombian news outlet has reported convulsions and other strange behaviors in 22 local teenagers who allegedly played “Charlie Charlie,” a simplified version of Ouija that became popular a year ago.The game consists of a pair of pencils or pens, a piece of paper and the invocation of a demonic spirit named “Charlie” who answers “yes” or “no” to questions put to him.Several days ago, almost two dozen young people between 12 and 15 years-old from the same school started to convulse and behave strangely. They were taken to the health center in the town of Nóvita in Colombia, not far from the Pacific coast and Panama border.Caracol News reported that the girls may have been “possessed” due to playing the game.One of the affected youths, whose identity has been withheld, told the outlet: “you can end up dying from those games because you know this is some...

Bogotá, Colombia, Jul 15, 2016 / 06:24 am (CNA/EWTN News).- A Colombian news outlet has reported convulsions and other strange behaviors in 22 local teenagers who allegedly played “Charlie Charlie,” a simplified version of Ouija that became popular a year ago.

The game consists of a pair of pencils or pens, a piece of paper and the invocation of a demonic spirit named “Charlie” who answers “yes” or “no” to questions put to him.

Several days ago, almost two dozen young people between 12 and 15 years-old from the same school started to convulse and behave strangely. They were taken to the health center in the town of Nóvita in Colombia, not far from the Pacific coast and Panama border.

Caracol News reported that the girls may have been “possessed” due to playing the game.

One of the affected youths, whose identity has been withheld, told the outlet: “you can end up dying from those games because you know this is something from the devil, and you don't play around with the devil.”

Claudia Patricia Asprilla, the mother of one of the girls involved, said that her daughter “said she doesn't want to go to school because she's afraid, she's frightened and last night she started to (get scared again). I'm worried about this because this is a scary thing. It's something you can't explain.”

Jorge Hurtado Bonilla of Nóvita's Family Protective Services explained that “last year we had a similar situation because the girls at a school apparently played what's called 'Charlie Charlie' and there were about seven isolated cases, but since then nothing on this large a scale has happened.”

Father Wilson Tamayo, pastor of Divine Child Church in Istmina, about 15 miles from Nóvita, told Caracol News that “all this happens precisely because we have closed the door of our hearts to God, and so I invite you to welcome God's message which is salvation, mercy and freedom.”

Caracol News reported that local authorities are visiting the affected girls' homes, bringing psychological, social and spiritual help.

Last spring, Charlie Charlie became popular among young people worldwide, as social media posts of the invocation went viral, prompting a wave of concern over the potential risk of being exposed to demonic possession.

Consulted by CNA in May 2015, noted Spanish exorcist Father José Antonio Fortea warned that the so-called #CharlieCharlieChallenge “does indeed involve the invocation of spirits.”

Even though he believes that those who play it “won't be possessed” necessarily, the spirit invoked “will stay around for a while.”

Frequently playing the “game,” the Spanish priest pointed out, may make “other spirits enter into even more frequent communication. And then yes the person can suffer much worse consequences from the demons.”

A news video documenting what happened to the teens can be viewed here: https://www.aciprensa.com/noticias/video-volvio-charlie-charlie-y-joven-afectada-advierte-con-el-diablo-no-se-juega-76265/

 

 

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IMAGE: CNS/ReutersBy Junno Arocho EstevesVATICANCITY (CNS) -- Pope Francis condemned the attack on Bastille Day Celebrations inFrance, calling it an act of "blind violence."Thepope expressed his "deep sorrow" and "spiritual closeness"with the French people in amessage toBishop Andre Marceau of Nice, signed by Cardinal Pietro Parolin, Vatican secretary of state. Pope Francis entrusted thevictims and their families to God's mercy."Thepope expresses his sympathy to those injured and to all those who havecontributed to rescue efforts, asking the Lord to sustain each one in this trial,"the cardinal wrote. He said Pope Francis imparted his blessing on grieving familieswhile invoking "God's gift of peace and harmony" upon the people ofFrance.France declaredthree days of mourning and extended its state of emergency after the July 14 attackalong Nice's seaside promenade; more than 80 people were killed and thedeath toll was mounting. The three days of mourning were to begin July 16. In Pari...

IMAGE: CNS/Reuters

By Junno Arocho Esteves

VATICAN CITY (CNS) -- Pope Francis condemned the attack on Bastille Day Celebrations in France, calling it an act of "blind violence."

The pope expressed his "deep sorrow" and "spiritual closeness" with the French people in a message to Bishop Andre Marceau of Nice, signed by Cardinal Pietro Parolin, Vatican secretary of state. Pope Francis entrusted the victims and their families to God's mercy.

"The pope expresses his sympathy to those injured and to all those who have contributed to rescue efforts, asking the Lord to sustain each one in this trial," the cardinal wrote. He said Pope Francis imparted his blessing on grieving families while invoking "God's gift of peace and harmony" upon the people of France.

France declared three days of mourning and extended its state of emergency after the July 14 attack along Nice's seaside promenade; more than 80 people were killed and the death toll was mounting. The three days of mourning were to begin July 16.

In Paris, Notre Dame Cathedral scheduled a Mass July 17 for to commemorate the victims.

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CALGARY, Alberta (AP) -- Police in Calgary say they've found a body believed to be that of a 5-year-old girl reported missing this week after her mother was found dead, and a suspect has been charged with murder in both deaths....

CALGARY, Alberta (AP) -- Police in Calgary say they've found a body believed to be that of a 5-year-old girl reported missing this week after her mother was found dead, and a suspect has been charged with murder in both deaths....

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A woman sleeps in her car, waiting to receive free dental care at a clinic in rural Virginia. Another peers though a fence at the Mexican border to see the grandmother she left behind 18 years before, when she was brought to the United States as a toddler....

A woman sleeps in her car, waiting to receive free dental care at a clinic in rural Virginia. Another peers though a fence at the Mexican border to see the grandmother she left behind 18 years before, when she was brought to the United States as a toddler....

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NEW YORK (AP) -- A New York City woman infected her male partner with Zika virus through sex, the first time female-to-male transmission of the germ has been documented....

NEW YORK (AP) -- A New York City woman infected her male partner with Zika virus through sex, the first time female-to-male transmission of the germ has been documented....

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